Later today, Apple will unveil the iPhone 6 at a special event in Cupertino, California. Somewhat unusually for Apple, it will be broadcasting a live video stream of the event — but, for reasons we still can’t fathom, Apple restricts the official feed to people watching on an iOS or OS X device. Fortunately, if you’re a Windows (or Android) user, we have a couple of solutions for watching live video of Apple’s event.

Finally! Thanks to Pornhub, the world’s largest porn site, we have some real statistics to back up the assumption that Apple users are prone to regular self-loving. Is this proof that, despite any preconceptions that the media might have, that Windows and Android users get more action than those stylish iDevice hipsters?

New devices certainly benefit the most from iOS 7, but if you look a little deeper, you’ll find that even older devices like the iPad 2 get a nice update as well. Only the last generation of iOS devices can use features like AirDrop, but even non-Retina iPads will receive a noticeable improvement going forward. To get you started with the new iOS, here are six tips and tricks that will make your experience more enjoyable.

Mozilla has been courting controversy with its move toward blocking some third-party cookies by default in Firefox. While preventing unvisited websites from setting cookies is undoubtedly good for consumers, advertisers are none too happy about it. Sadly, Mozilla is now delaying this feature thanks to the complaints it has received from “concerned site owners.”

Apple has been uncharacteristically quiet in 2013. The year is already one-third over, and we haven’t heard any major announcements coming out of Cupertino. Well, Apple’s own Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) is only two months away now, so rumors are finally surfacing about what’s in store for Mac OS X 10.9. With better multi-monitor support, a tabbed user interface for the Finder, and a rebuilt web browser, this next operating system seems to be focused on the power user.

Microsoft sees WebKit as a threat — specifically in the mobile space. This has even caused some people to accuse WebKit-based browsers of becoming what IE6 once was. The reality is that WebKit is not, will not be, and can not be the same problem that IE6 once was.

On iOS, Safari is king. It’s fast, easy to use, and ever-increasingly standards compliant. It’s the default browser, and we sadly can’t change that without jailbreaking. However, we can do the majority of our surfing in other feature-rich browsers available on iOS. Frankly, there are some very compelling reasons to do so.

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